Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
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Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Corva Coleman. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is saying more about a controversial U.S. military boat strike in the Caribbean on September 2nd. He says he saw the initial strike but did not see the second one that killed two survivors. Some lawmakers say that strike may be a war crime.
NPR's Deirdre Walsh tells us the House and Senate Armed Services Committees say they'll investigate.
Members of both parties are really demanding to review the evidence and this timeline. Senate Majority Leader John Thune said he backed current U.S. policy, saying he agrees the administration has the authority now for these attacks in the Caribbean. And Hegseth is part of the team that put those policies in place. But he also added that Hegseth, quote, serves at the pleasure of the president.
That's not exactly an endorsement of the secretary.
NPR's Deirdre Walsh reporting.
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Chapter 2: What recent military actions has the U.S. taken in the Caribbean?
The Trump administration says it is targeting boats suspected of smuggling drugs to the U.S. Ceasefire talks between U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Russian President Vladimir Putin ended in Moscow yesterday. There was no breakthrough. NATO ministers are meeting today in Brussels. They're reiterating support for Ukraine.
And Piers Fatima al-Kassab reports Britain has pledged millions more in aid to Ukraine.
Speaking at a meeting of NATO foreign ministers in Brussels, Britain's Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper announced an additional $13 million to support Ukraine's energy infrastructure after heavy Russian airstrikes in recent days led to power cuts.
because whilst President Putin is seeking to switch the lights off and plunge Ukraine into darkness, we will continue to work to switch the lights back on.
She blamed Russia's President Vladimir Putin for the lack of a peace deal, saying both President Trump and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky were seeking peace, but that Putin was attempting to escalate war. Fatima al-Kassab, NPR News, London.
Senate Democrats are slamming the Trump administration for cuts to the U.S. Forest Service. They say the cuts put the agency way behind in wildfire prevention work. NPR's Kirk Siegler reports the White House disagrees.
The Democrats are citing a recent analysis by retired firefighters that shows the U.S. Forest Service is 38 percent behind its own targets for prescribed fires, thinning and other projects aimed at making Western public forests less vulnerable to wildfires. This follows President Trump's hiring freeze and doge cuts.
In a letter to the Forest Service chief, Democrats, including Senators Jeff Merkley of Oregon and Mark Heinrich of New Mexico, demand a response by next week on questions like how many wildland firefighters are actually on the job and where specific staffing gaps are causing the delay in prevention work.
The Trump administration has maintained its cuts are making the forest service more efficient and the agency has what it needs to fight fires. NPR's Kirk Siegler reporting.
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